The Scotsman

Please be more aware of the effects of autism – families need your support

Jenny Paterson describes how shops and businesses have signed up to promise a quiet hour for those affected

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This week more than 480 organisati­ons across Scotland will take part in the world’s first mass participat­ion autism quiet hour.

From the Bank of Scotland in Lerwick, to Superdrug in Stranraer, via Pets at Home in Oban and even the Scottish Parliament, a wide range of organisati­ons have signed up to The National Autistic Society’s Autism Hour.

Throughout the week they will all take steps to ensure autistic customers can access and enjoy their public spaces, such as reducing noise, dimming bright lights, and sharing autism informatio­n with employees and other customers.

Autism Hour kicked off at 10am on yesterday at intu Braehead and Julie Macdonald, the co-chair of our volunteer branch in Renfrewshi­re, was pleased to see her local shopping centre taking part. Her 13-year-old son, Lewis, is autistic and she told me that he can manage no more than 30 minutes at the shops because he finds the lights, noise and smells too difficult.

Julie hopes that Autism Hour will help organisati­ons across Scotland to understand that small adjustment­s canmakeave­rybigdiffe­rencetofam­ilies like hers.

We know that many autistic people find public spaces overwhelmi­ng and uninviting – and this is often made worse by encounteri­ng people who simply don’t understand their condition.

A survey we conducted as part of our campaign to raise public understand­ing of autism, Too Much Informatio­n, revealed that 90 per cent of families have experience­d people staring at their child’s autistic behaviour and 73 per cent have been ‘tutted’ at. Julie has experience­d this first-hand when out shopping with Lewis. Shedescrib­eshimgoing‘rigid’ when he’s uncomforta­ble, and says that people around him assume he’s having a teenage strop. Sometimes Lewis takes Julie’s hand for comfort, and that makes people stare even more, because he’s almost as tall as her.

Julie finds these reactions upsetting. That’s completely understand­able, I would be furious! She says she feels like people are judging her, that they think she’s a bad parent and that Lewis is spoiled.

Julie would love to explain what’s really going on, and why the staring and tutting really doesn’t help her or Lewis, but her priority in those moments is protecting and support- ing her son. Almost half of autistic people and their families sometimes don’t go out because they’re worried about how people will react to them.

That’s simply not good enough, and it’s why I believe that sharing informatio­n about the condition with staff and members of the public during Autism Hour is as important as recognisin­g the sensory needs of autistic customers. I don’t think it’s necessary for everyone to become an autism expert, but I do believe everyonesh­ouldhaveso­meundersta­nding of the condition which affects around 58,000 people in Scotland.

It’s really encouragin­g to know that 487 organisati­ons in Scotland and more than 4,500 across the UK are taking part in Autism Hour in its first year, and I’d like to thank and congratula­te them all.

I would also like to give a special mention to Sport Aberdeen. Not content with scooping an Autism Friendly Award just last month, it is also holding a special ice skating session in the Beach Leisure Centre and Linx Ice Arena as part of Autism Hour. I am incredibly impressed by this organisati­on’s enthusiasm and dedication; it really is playing an important role in Aberdeen’s efforts to become Scotland’s first autismfrie­ndly city.

Of course, there shouldn’t be just one hour in which autistic people can enjoy the shops, cinemas, restau- rants and leisure centres that most of us take for granted.

Autistic people and their families shouldn’t feel that they can’t access these spaces at the same time as everyone else. That’s not what Autism Hour is about. It’s about helping organisati­ons to understand the

needs of their autistic customers. It’s about proving that being autismfrie­ndly isn’t difficult or restrictin­g. And it’s about tackling the social isolation that two thirds of autistic people face.

It’s an important step forward, and that’s why I’m glad that, this week, Scotland is making time for Autism Hour. To find out about organisati­ons near you that are taking part in Autism Hour, please visit: www. autism.org.uk/get-involved/tmi/ autism-hour/map.aspx

Jenny Paterson is director of The National Autistic Society Scotland.

 ??  ?? 0 Children with autism often struggle in public spaces which we take for granted as they find it difficult to handle bright lights, noise and smells – and some people around them are less than supportive
0 Children with autism often struggle in public spaces which we take for granted as they find it difficult to handle bright lights, noise and smells – and some people around them are less than supportive
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